The show starts with a few notable numbers and hires that made the news in April before moving on to the five main stories — Bloomberg's report that Apple will switch the Mac to their own ARM processors, Apple's continued Environmental push, the end of the line for the AirPort, the Q2 2018 earnings call, and the iMac turning 20. The show finishes with a quick rundown of a few other Apple related stories that made the news in April.

The show starts with a few notable numbers and hires that made the news in April before moving on to the five main stories — Bloomberg's report that Apple will switch the Mac to their own ARM processors, Apple's continued Environmental push, the end of the line for the AirPort, the Q2 2018 earnings call, and the iMac turning 20. The show finishes with a quick rundown of a few other Apple related stories that made the news in April.

In this solo show I ask you to imagine a line, and then take you and your line on an imaginary journey from historghrhams, to brightness sliders, to black and white point sliders, to contrast sliders, and finally on to curves and levels adjustments. These controls are ubiquitous, so understanding them should prove extremely useful!

In this solo show I ask you to imagine a line, and then take you and your line on an imaginary journey from historghrhams, to brightness sliders, to black and white point sliders, to contrast sliders, and finally on to curves and levels adjustments. These controls are ubiquitous, so understanding them should prove extremely useful!

The show starts with a few notable numbers and one notable staffing change before moving into the three main stories for March — Apple's Education event, updates for all Apple's OSes, and the on-going debate around security and privacy. The show finishes with a quick rundown of some smaller stories that made the news in March.

The show starts with a few notable numbers and one notable staffing change before moving into the three main stories for March — Apple's Education event, updates for all Apple's OSes, and the on-going debate around security and privacy. The show finishes with a quick rundown of some smaller stories that made the news in March.

This month's show is a solo show where I share my thoughts on how I think about ethical and moral questions around photography. This episode was inspired by episode 184 of Shutter Time with Sid & Mac with special guest Antonio Rosario.

This month's show is a solo show where I share my thoughts on how I think about ethical and moral questions around photography. This episode was inspired by episode 184 of Shutter Time with Sid & Mac with special guest Antonio Rosario.

Allister Jenks: Good show. I find it hard to disagree with anything you said about deciding a response.

Just one point about “documentary” photography. I don’t think (pardon the pun) that it’s black and white. Compositing two images is technically not what the camera saw, but what if I use Affinity Photo’s stacking feature to remove cars or people crossing in front of a building instead of waiting for a gap? That resulting composite doesn’t really lie unless the presence of those cars or people is pertinent to the scene.

Also, we already know that what comes out of the camera is quite different from what our eyes see. Does the photographer’s attempt to portray what they thought they saw in person actually match up with “reality?”

I'm joined by +Gaz Maz from the MyMac Podcast and Simon Parnell from the Essential Apple podcast.

The show starts with a quick follow-up on 'Throttle Gate' before moving on to the three main stories of the month, the arrival of HomePods in people's homes, Apple's moves to source their Cobalt directly from mines, and the on-going war on privacy. The show finishes with a quick rundown of some shorter Apple-related stories that made the news in February.

I'm joined by +Gaz Maz from the MyMac Podcast and Simon Parnell from the Essential Apple podcast.

The show starts with a quick follow-up on 'Throttle Gate' before moving on to the three main stories of the month, the arrival of HomePods in people's homes, Apple's moves to source their Cobalt directly from mines, and the on-going war on privacy. The show finishes with a quick rundown of some shorter Apple-related stories that made the news in February.